Aesthetic preference for artificially selected color variant affects mate choice copying behavior in female Poecilia latipinna

Three experiments were conducted examining whether an artificially selected “gold” color variant in female “models” affects mate choice copying behavior in sailfin mollies (Poecilia latipinna). Experiment I consisted of a pair of female preference assays, first assessing preference for male body size, followed by a mate choice copying assay that paired a model female with the smaller, non-preferred male from the initial preference test. Female subjects were divided into three groups that used either a wildtype female model, an artificially selected “gold” variant (cultivated within the aquarium fish trade) model, or control wherein no model was presented. Results showed females consistently copied the model’s choice, switching preferences from the larger to smaller male when paired with a model regardless of color. In the second experiment wildtype females were presented with a pair of size-matched dummy males both of which paired with model females (one gold and the other wild type). Subjects consistently preferred the male previously paired with the gold- over the male with the wildtype-model, suggesting pre-existing sensory/perceptual biases may have affected their mate choice copying behavior. Previous studies have offered evidence for the spread of novel traits in males via sensory exploitation. However, these results indicate such biases may influence courtship behavior in circumstances where the novel trait is expressed in females as well. For the third experiment, wildtype females were presented with a choice between gold vs wildtype dummy males, the results of which revealing significant preferences for gold. In a follow-up assay pairing a wild type model with the non-preferred wildtype male, females maintained their preference for gold males despite the conflicting social driver of mate choice copying. These data offer evidence for the existence of a perceptual/cognitive bias in the context of mate choice copying, favoring the gold phenotype and/or novelty in general.


Introduction
Natural selection emerges from predation, competition, and climate, among other external forces of nature acting on the individuals in question.In contrast, sexual selection is a potentially independent, self-directed process in which the organisms themselves (especially females) act as the guiding hand facilitating evolutionary change through their sexual and social choices [1].Darwin [2] once described animals as having a "taste of the beautiful" and an "aesthetic faculty", suggesting that mating preferences could evolve for displays that had virtually no adaptive value to the chooser; embracing instead a broader concept of sexual selection wherein sex ornaments needn't be tied to the health, vigor, parenting skills and/or genetic quality of prospective mates, but favored for their aesthetical appeal alone.An enormous body of research has emerged since Darwin's time demonstrating that animals, through their mating choices, can indeed play an impactful role in their own evolution [3].Animals therefore have the potential to evolve arbitrary and useless mating signals/ornaments completely independent of (and sometimes in opposition to) the forces of natural selection [1,2,4].
Such aesthetic preferences are presumed to be a product of the observer's "subjective experience", defined as the "unobservable, internal mental qualities produced by a flow of sensory and cognitive events" that evolved in a diversity of contexts both in and outside the realm of sexual selection [1,4,5].For better or worse in terms of survivorship, the suitor is under strong selection to evolve signals that match the parameters to which their would-be mate's sensory system is most sensitive [5,6]; to stand out amongst the cacophony of environmental noise and/or rivals within the social group [7,8], or otherwise exploit pre-existing biases in the receiver's nervous system [4,[9][10][11][12][13][14].
The majority of studies offering compelling support of the sensory bias hypothesis [15] come from a substantial number of mate choice experiments revealing female preferences for traits that males of their species do not naturally express [e.g., 14,16,17].The preferred ornaments in such studies are often borrowed from those observed in males of closely-related heterospecifics where they naturally occur [e.g., [10][11][12][13] or represent more exaggerated forms of conspecific traits [18].In such instances, the argument that a pre-existing bias influenced the signal's evolution often rely on assumptions of phylogenetic reconstruction showing the preference pre-dated the appearance of the male ornament in question [10,12,13,[19][20][21][22].In addition, numerous studies have identified female mate preferences for completely arbitrary, novel male traits [e.g., [23][24][25][26].Schlupp et al. [26], for example, described two instances wherein female sailfin (Poecilia latipinna) and shortfin (P.mexicana) molly fishes preferred naturally occurring novel male ornaments (an orange "tumor" and "spot", respectively, in their dorsal fins) to unadorned wildtype males.The authors concluded that the preferences observed were pre-existing since similar pigmentation appears in closely related taxa (guppies, P. reticulata), where males express an array of bright colors, including orange.Female guppies typically prefer males with more orange [27] as do some sailfins when red markings are artificially applied [20].The authors further suggested that female preference for such markings might be a characteristic of a number of Poeciliid species.
A more recent study of female preference in P. latipinna provided evidence for the emergence of a sensory bias within a population for an unnatural, artificial orange-colored distal fringe added to the caudal fin of an otherwise wildtype male, while further offering a mechanism by which the ornament could spread via mate choice copying [14].Such copying behavior is a well-documented form of non-independent mate choice wherein females copy the choice of other females by observing a sexual interaction between a male and a "model" female and then mating with the same male the model had selected [14,[28][29][30][31]. Mate choice copying behavior has been described for many fishes [14,[32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44] among numerous other animal taxa [e.g., 28,[45][46][47][48].
Mate choice copying has the potential to be a powerful social and evolutionary force of nature.In having her mating decision(s) copied by onlookers, the behavior of just one female could alter the mating preferences of an entire population in a few generations' time.Mate choice copying therefore provides a mechanism by which biases expressed by a relatively small number of females could spread rapidly through a population, thereby enhancing the relative reproductive success of males bearing the desirable novel trait [14].But what if the novel ornament in question were initially expressed in one or a minority of females rather than males?In species such as P. latipinna where mate choice copying is common, a model female with a bias-tapping, aethetically pleasing, novel/arbitrary trait, might draw the attention of a disproportionate number of observers to the same males that they chose.In so doing, such females might facilitate/enhance the perceived attractiveness of the "chosen" male(s)-a social phenomenon that is not unique to fish, particularly in the context of cultural evolution [see 49 for review].
The initial purpose of the project described herein was to examine whether expression of an artificially selected "gold" color variant in female "models" might affect the mating behavior of wild type sailfin mollies, P. latipinna, in a set of standard mate choice copying experiments.The first of three experiments (expt.I) consisted of a pair of female preference assays, the first of which providing a baseline assessment of female preference for male body size.The assay was then repeated using the same subjects and male stimuli, only this time pairing a model female with the smaller, presumably less-attractive male for a period of time prior to conducting the preference test.Female subjects were divided into three groups-one using a wild type female model, a second wherein an artificially selected "gold" variety of P. latipinna (cultivated within the aquarium fish trade) served as the model, and a 3 rd control group in which female subjects were unable to see the model prior to testing.Results showing that females switch their preferences from the larger to smaller male when pairing it with a model would provide additional evidence in support of mate choice copying behavior in P. latipinna.Moreover, data revealing such shifts in preference among females presented with a gold model in particular would suggest wild type female subjects recognized individuals expressing the gold phenotype as conspecifics worthy of copying as well.
The project's second experiment (expt II) involved presenting a separate cohort of wild type females with a size-matched pair of dummy males both of which paired with a model female (one with a gold and the other wild type model) in order to determine which model (if either) was more effective at influencing the test subjects' copying decisions.Results showing preferences for the males that had previously been paired with a gold model over males paired with a wildtype model would suggest the former were more effective than the latter at drawing the attention female observers, thereby offering evidence that pre-existing sensory/perceptual biases in the female nervous system can affect mate choice copying decisions in P. latipinna.
The secondary aim of the present study (and the inspiration behind the project's third experiment) was to assess the preferences of wild type females for males expressing the "gold" phenotype when paired with size-match species-typical wild type males.Similar to expt.I, subjects were subsequently run through a mate choice copying assay wherein a wildtype model female was paired with the non-preferred male from the initial preference test.Evidence of a preferences for gold males in the first test would lend further support to the sensory bias hypothesis while changes in female strength of preferences for either male across tests would offer additional evidence of mate choice copying in this species.
Sailfin mollies (P.latipinna) are a well-studied species of livebearer in the family Poeciliidae native to fresh, brackish, and coastal salt water in lowland habitats from North Carolina to Texas and the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico.Preferring marshes, lowland streams, swamps, and estuaries, they are common in peninsular Florida where test subjects for the present study were initially sampled (Punta Gorda, Fl).Sailfins, with their many color varieties, have been bred in captivity for decades with several artificially selected domestic strains having been developed for the aquarium trade (including the gold variety used in the present study).Their popularity stems in large part from their bright colors and array of color patterns.Indeed, much variation occurs naturally in the wild, with melanistic and speckled forms known and described.However, body coloration of most wild type individuals is generally light gray with a smattering of breeding males becoming greenish-blue [50; personal obs].P. latipinna serve as an ideal system for use in the present study thanks not only for the diversity of artificiallyselected color variants bred in the aquarium fish trade, but because both sexes have been shown to copy the mate choice of others in the lab [14,31,35] and wild [36], and because females have been shown to exhibit other sensory biases in their evaluation of prospective mates [14,18,51].
Evidence of female preferences for males expressing the novel/arbitrary, artificially-selected gold phenotype coupled with a tendency to preferentially copy the mate choices of model females expressing the same novel trait would offer strong support for the existence of hidden aesthetic preferences for phenotypes that have no adaptive value for the chooser.Rather, "gold", among perhaps other as yet untested color preferences in P. latipinna and related species, may manifest simply as a product of the observer's subjective sensory/perceptual experience.Moreover, such findings would offer a mechanism by which a novel trait expressed in females (via its effect on the mate choice copying behavior of others) might alter the strength of selection operating on males, thereby influencing which and how many males may successfully breed.This work combines the separate concepts of aesthetic preference for novel ornaments and mate copying to explain the evolution of seemingly arbitrary signals used in the context of reproduction.Might a preference for the gold phenotype interact with a mechanism for passing on information, such as mate copying, in a way that facilitates its spread within a population?

Subjects
Sailfin mollies are live-bearing Poeciliid fish that live in mixed-sex shoals of 10-20 individuals.Test subjects used in all three experiments describe below were sexually mature laboratory reared females raised from samples collected in Punta Gorda, FL, U.S.A. (26.9298oN, 82.0454o W).The females used as models in the mate choice copying assays were either selectively bred, gold-variant P. latipinna females purchased from a local breeder, or wild type females drawn from the same lab population of Punta Gorda mollies as those used as test subjects.
The fish, separated by sex and variety (gold vs wild type), were maintained in several 70-L stock tanks under a 12:12 hr light:dark regime with broad spectrum fluorescent lighting, at an average water temperature of 25˚C, and fed them ad libitum with flake food (Tetramin), tubifex worms, daphnia, or Artemia nauplii once a day.The wild type and gold variety mollies were kept in separate stock tanks with no opportunity to see or interact with each other in any way.Fish were housed in these conditions for a minimum of 6 weeks prior to testing.All aspects of data collection and analysis were conducted between January 2019 and June 2022 as time permitted.

Dummy construction
In order to control for variation in behavior among other traits, dummy model fish were used as the male stimuli for all three preference experiments described below.The use of dummies permitted modification of specific traits of interest in the stimulus fish, controlling for all other potential confounding variables while compromising little in the way of visual detail [52].The dummies were produced as described in MacLaren et al. [18].Three pairs of dummy males (one "large" and one "small", measuring 7.0 cm and 5.5 cm, respectively; within the natural size range of males in this population) were constructed using pictures taken of three wild type P. latipinna males for use in phase 1 of experiment I.Each dummy pair (large and small) were size-adjusted versions of a single image with different males/images used to create the three pairs.Another set of dummy males were constructed using multiple images of wild type and gold P. latipinna males for use in experiments II and III, all of which with fins erect and size matched measuring 7 cm total length.

Testing apparatus and procedure
The testing environment for all three female preference experiments described below consisted of three 17.5-L aquaria (50 cm × 26 cm × 13.5 cm each) lined up end to end using an apparatus and protocol similar to that used in previous mate preference experiments with P. latipinna [e.g., 14,18], among other closely-related poecilid species [10][11][12][13].Females were transferred to separate 8.75-L isolation tanks (30cm × 15 cm × 20 cm) for approximately 48 hr prior to testing.The test subject was then placed in a preference testing arena that was divided into three zones by two black vertical lines drawn on the front wall: a 30 cm × 26 cm × 13.5 cm "neutral zone" flanked on each side by a 10 cm × 26 cm × 13.5 cm "preference zone."A pair of aquaria flanking the female's tank each housed an adjustable motorized belt and pulley system to which the dummy stimuli were attached [see 11 for further details] (Fig 1).
Experiment I. Expt.I consisted of a pair of female preference assays the first of which (phase 1) involving a baseline assessment of female preference for male body size.The same subjects were subsequently run through a mate choice copying assay (phase 2) using the same male stimuli, only this time pairing a model female with the smaller, non-preferred male for a period of time before initiating the preference test.Female test subjects were randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups-one involving the use of a wildtype female as the model (group W; n = 18), a second group wherein an artificially selected "gold" variety of P. latipinna cultivated within the aquarium fish trade served as the model (group G; n = 19), and a 3 rd control group (group C; n = 17) where subjects were unable to see the model prior to testing (see below for details).
Female test subjects from all three groups (W, G, and C) were run through phase 1 of expt.I (the baseline assessment of female preference for male body size) as follows: A wildtype female test subject selected at random from designated stock tanks was introduced into the preference test arena and allowed to acclimate for 15 min.Upon completion of the acclimation period, the subject female was placed in a clear Plexiglas cylinder (10 cm diameter) in the center of the tank, and the opaque barriers obstructing her view of a pair of dummy males measuring 7.0 cm and 5.5 cm SL were removed.The apparatus was turned on causing the dummy fish to begin "pacing" back and forth along the glass facing the subject tank (Fig 1A).Following a 10-min observation period, the test female was released from the cylinder into the test arena and permitted to swim freely throughout the tank, recording and documenting time spent in each preference zone using an iPad positioned in front of the arena at a distance such that the video captured the entire arena (i.e., both preferences zones as well as the neutral zone) in its field of view (Fig 1B).After 10 min of testing, the opaque barriers were repositioned to obstruct the female's view of the dummy males.The male dummies were then switched to opposite sides of the test arena before initiating another round of testing in the same manner as described above.
Following an approximately 10 min break during which subjects were left undisturbed in the test arena, phase 2 of expt.I was initiated.Phase 2 involved pairing a conspecific model female with the non-preferred male from phase 1 for a 10-min "observation period" (Fig 1C ) prior to repeating preference assay conducted in phase 1 (Fig 1D).More specifically, an 8.75-L "model tank" containing a "model female" selected at random from lab populations of either wild type or gold varieties of P. latipinna, was positioned between the test arena and the nonpreferred dummy male's tank.Upon completion of the 10-min break between phases 1 and 2, the subject female was placed back in the clear Plexiglas cylinder in the center of the arena.Opaque barriers obstructing her view of the dummy males and model female were then removed and the apparatus turned on, causing the dummy fish to once again "pace" along the glass facing the subject tank (Fig 1C).It was assumed that the proximity of the model to a particular dummy male indicated to the subject female the model's preference for that male [14].The observation period lasted 10-min during which the test female (confined within the cylinder) could observe the model female next to the "preferred" male and no female next to the "non-preferred" male on the opposite end of the arena (Fig 1C ).
Following the 10-min observation period, the model female and her tank were removed from the experimental setup and the "preferred" male's tank returned to its original position adjacent to the test arena.The test female was then released from the cylinder into the test arena and permitted to once again swim freely throughout the arena, recording and documenting time spent in each preference zone using an iPad (Fig 1D).After 10 min of testing, the opaque barriers were repositioned to obstruct the female's view of the dummy males.At this point, the large and small dummy males were switched to opposite ends of the test arena with the model female and tank repositioned so as to remain between the test arena and smaller male's tank.The same behavioral protocol was then repeated with the stimuli in their new positions.Upon completion of the assay, the subject female was returned to a stock tank designated for "tested females" to ensure all subjects were tested only once.
For all test subjects in expt.I, as well as for all females tested in experiments II and III described below, time spent within a given preference zone was defined as "choosing" a male.More specifically, "female preference for male X" was defined as a test subject spending more than 50% of her total preference zone time (i.e., time with "male X" + time with "male Y" per 20min test) within male X's preference zone [14].Time spent in association with a male (i.e., within a "preference zone") is commonly used as a proxy for assessing mating preferences given its positive correlation with probability of copulation with the preferred male in several fish species examined [e.g., guppies: 53-55; gobies: 56; and pipefish: 57].However, subjects that showed a side bias (i.e., spent more than 90% of their total time in the same preference zone regardless of which of the two dummy males was on that side at the time) were omitted from the analysis [14].
The time that the subject females spent with the larger and smaller male in phase 1 of expt I were quantified and compared with their time spent in association with the same males in phase 2 of expt I.If the female spent more time in association with the larger male in phase 1 and spent more time with the previously non-preferred, smaller male in phase 2, then it was concluded that the model female had induced a shift in the subject female's preference indicative of mate choice copying.
As mentioned above, subject females were randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups prior to initiating expt.I: The wild type model group (group W; n = 18) wherein the model was a wildtype female; the gold model group (group G; n = 19) wherein the model was an artificially selected female expressing the gold phenotype; or a control group (group C; n = 17) wherein an empty model tank was used.The control group facilitated an examination of whether individual females show consistent preferences for either dummy male under circumstances where they had no opportunity to copy the choices of a model female.The control was performed in the same manner as those involving a model female with one exceptionduring the 10-min observation periods, no model was introduced (Fig 1C for Control).However, in order to maintain consistency among the three groups, the protocol for control females included placement of a model tank (absent a model female) in front of the "preferred" male during both observation periods.
Experiment II.A second female preference experiment (expt.II) was conducted using a separate cohort of wild type females (n = 20) from those used in expt.I. Expt.II similarly involved the simultaneous presentation of two dummy males.However, in this case, they were size-matched images, both of which paired with female models housed in 8.75-L "model tanks" positioned between the test arena and tanks housing the males (Fig 2).One model tank contained a wild type Punta Gorda female while the other housed an artificially selected gold female randomly selected from their respective stock tanks.Subject females were placed in isolation tanks using the same procedure as described for expt.I.The subject female was introduced into the test arena for a 15 min.acclimation period before placement in the centrallylocated Plexiglas cylinder equidistant from both males.Opaque barriers obstructing the subject's view of the model tanks and male dummies were then removed providing her an opportunity to observe the model females and stimulus males on both ends of the arena for a period of 10-min (Fig 2A).The sides of the wild type and gold model females (L vs. R) was randomized for each subject.
Following the 10-min observation period, the model females and their tanks were removed from the experimental setup and the tanks containing the stimulus males returned to their original positions adjacent to the test arena.The test female was then released from the cylinder for a 10-min period of time during which she could choose between the pair of dummy males (Fig 2B).The opaque barriers blocking the female's view of the dummy males were then restored and the model tanks containing the same pair of model females repositioned between the test arena and male tanks.Similar to expt.I, it was assumed that the proximity of the model to the stimulus male indicated to the subject female the model's preference for that male.
In preparation for a second round of preference testing with the same test subject, the wild type and gold models were switched to opposite ends of the test arena, thereby positioning them in association with the opposite male from the initial assay.The female was then put back in the centrally-located Plexiglas cylinder and the barriers removed for a second 10-min observation period after which the model females and their tanks were again removed from the experimental setup.The test female was then released from the cylinder for a second 10min time interval during which she could choose once again between the same pair of dummy males.Upon completion of the preference assay, the subject was transferred to a stock tank designated for "tested females" to ensure all subjects were tested only once.The time each subject spent in association with the wild type-modeled and gold-modeled males across rounds 1 and 2 of expt.II was measured.
Experiment III.Similar to expt.I, expt.III consisted of two phases, the first of which (phase 1) designed to assess the preferences of wild type females for a wild type dummy male vs. one expressing the same artificially-selected gold phenotype as the model females from expt.I and II.The particular pair of male dummy stimuli used in a given preference test was randomly assigned for each female subject prior to their introduction into the test arena.Similar to the protocols used for experiments I and II, the subject female (following a 15 min.acclimation period) was placed in a clear Plexiglas cylinder (10 cm diameter) in the center of the tank and the opaque barriers obstructing her view of the dummy males were removed.The apparatus was then turned on causing the dummy fish to begin "pacing" back and forth along the glass facing the subject tank.During this stage of the experiment, the subject female (while confined in the cylinder) could observe both male dummies for a total of 10-min (Fig 1A).The female was then released from the cylinder into the test arena, and the time she spent within each preference zone documented using an iPad to record all behaviors observed (Fig 1B).After 10 min of testing, the opaque barriers were repositioned to once again obstruct the female's view of the dummy males.The female was then placed back in the cylinder for a brief time during which dummy males were switched to opposite sides of the arena.The opaque barriers were then removed once more, and the subject female released from the cylinder for another 10 min of preference testing.The female was then returned to her isolation tank where she remained for 24 hr before being placed back in the test arena for phase 2 of expt.III.
Phase 2 of expt.III examined mate choice copying behavior.Similar to phase 2 of expt.I, an 8.75-L model tank containing a wildtype model female was positioned between the test arena and the non-preferred dummy male's tank from phase 1.Individual subject females from phase 1 of expt.III were then transferred back into the test arena for another 15 min.period of acclimation.The subject was subsequently placed in the Plexiglas cylinder in the same manner as phase 1 of expt.III, and provided an opportunity to observe the model female next to the non-preferred male from the previous day (i.e., the male with whom the test female had spent less time in phase 1) (Fig 1C).The side of the preferred male (L vs. R) was randomized for each subject before initiating phase 2 of expt.III.The model tank contained a mature female selected at random from lab populations of wild type P. latipinna.Similar to phase 2 of expt.I, it was assumed that the proximity of the model to the non-preferred dummy male indicated to the subject female the model's preference for that male.The observation period for phase 2 of expt.III lasted 10-min during which the test female (confined within the cylinder) could observe the model female next to the non-preferred male and no female next to the preferred male from the previous day.
Following the 10-min observation period, the model female and her tank were removed from the experimental setup and the non-preferred male's tank returned to its original position adjacent to the test arena.The test female was then released from the cylinder for a second round of preference testing.Phase 2 of expt.III proceeded in identical fashion to phase 1 of expt.III, involving two 10-min trials during which the subject female could choose between the pair of dummy males (Fig 1D).The time each subject spent with the previously preferred and non-preferred males was again measured as described above.
The time that the subject female spent with the non-preferred male in phase 2 of expt.III was quantified and compared with the time she spent with the same dummy male in phase 1 of expt.III.If a female spent more time with the non-preferred male in phase 2 than in phase 1, it was concluded that the model female had induced a shift in the subject female's strength of preference indicative of mate choice copying.

Behavioral measures and statistical analyses
As in previous experiments of this kind [10][11][12][13][14]18] all video data recorded on an iPad were played back in real time to determine the total time spent in each preference zone as well as time spent in the neutral zone per test subject.Strength of preference [SOP, (expt.I: time spent near the larger male-time spent near the smaller male; expt.II: time spent near the male associated with gold model-time spent near the male associated with wild type model; expt.III: time spent near gold male-time spent near wild type male)] were calculated for each subject female in from all three experiments.
For expt.I, paired samples t tests were used to assess female preference for the larger-vs smaller-male in phase 1 and for the model-preferred-vs non-preferred-male in phase 2. Standard 2-samples t-tests were used to compare preferences for the larger male in phase 1 vs phase 2 and for the smaller male in phase 1 (no model) vs phase 2 (with model).Female preference in all comparisons was measured as time (s) spent in "male A's" preference zone vs time (s) spent in "male B's" preference zone.Female preference in the copying assays of expt.II was measured in identical fashion: time (s) spent in the preference zone of the male previously associated with the wild type model vs time (s) spent in the preference zone of the male previously associated with the gold model.Lastly, for expt.III, female preference for the gold vs wildtype males in (phase 1) and subsequent copying assays (phase 2) were assessed in identical fashion as expt.I. Four females were omitted from statistical analysis because of side biases as described above.All statistical analyses satisfied the assumptions of normality and equal variance, and all probabilities given are two-tailed.

Ethics statement
My research associates and I have adhered to the guidelines for the Use of Animals in Research, all U.S. legal requirements, as well as the guidelines established by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of Merrimack College.Specifically, the research methods presented herein were described in Research Protocol 1RDM1019 and approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of Merrimack College.All animal experiments comply with the National Institutes of Health guide for the care and use of Laboratory animals (NIH Publications No. 8023, revised 1978) and such guidelines have been followed.

Qualitative assessment of female behavior
Qualitatively, the male-directed behaviors observed most commonly by subject females during the dummy presentations reflected those attributed to mating behavior for most poecilid species including P. latipinna [27,57,58].Additionally, the model females used in all three experiments were responsive to and interacted with the female test subjects in similar fashion with no meaningful differences observed between gold and wild type individuals.Moreover, all models also reacted in a similar sexually-responsive manner to the dummy males in each of the three experiments regardless of color morph.

Experiment I: Baseline mate choice copying assays using wild type and gold model females
Paired samples t-tests comparing the total time females spent in association with the larger versus smaller male dummy in phase 1 revealed that females belonging to all three groups (W, G, and C) spent significantly more time with the larger of the two (Table 1; Fig 3).However, there were three cases where females balked the trend, spending more time with the smaller male than the larger one.For these subjects only, the model female was paired with the larger rather than smaller male during the observation period of phase 2.
In phase 2, females from groups W (n = 18) and G (n = 19) significantly increased the relative time spent in front of the previously non-preferred smaller male after having viewed a model female next to him for 10 min between trials, revealing a significant difference in mean strength of preference (SOP) between phases 1 vs 2 (Table 1; Fig 4).Correspondingly, group W and G females spent significantly less time in front of previously preferred larger male in phase 2 than phase 1, again demonstrating a significant difference in mean SOP in phases 1 vs 2 (Table 1; Fig 4).Both group W and group G females therefore copied the choices of the model females immediately after observing a social interaction between the model female and her "preferred" male in both rounds of testing (i.e., subject females switched their preferences from phase 1 to phase 2 in correspondence with the positioning of the model, be it a wild type or gold female).Females from the control group C (n = 17) showed a similar preference for the larger male in phase 1 as those observed for groups W and G (Table 1; Fig 3).However, unlike groups W and G, females from group C maintained these preferences when retested in phase 2 in the absence of being able to view the model during the observation period, showing no difference in mean SOP between phases (Table 1; Fig 4).1: T-tests comparing mean time spent in association with: 1. 'male X' vs 'male Y' in experiments I-III; and 2. 'male X' in phase 1 (no model female) vs the same male in phase 2 (model) for experiments I and III.Groups 'W', 'G', and 'C', refer to the three cohorts of females from expt.I that used wild type, gold, or no female models in phase 2, respectively.Where significant differences were observed, the preferred male is listed in bold font.

Experiment II: The effect of gold vs wild type models on mate choice copying behavior
Females preferred the male that had been paired with the gold model over the male paired with the wild type model in both the first trial (wild: 140.05, 63-244 s; gold: 219.25, 122-409 s; t = 3.692, df = 38, p < 0.001) and second trial (wild: 129.45, 56-217 s; gold: 210.10, 108-295 s; t = 4.975, df = 38, p < 0.001) of expt.II (Table 1; Fig 5).Subjects therefore changed their preferences to the opposite male when the model females were switched, consistently favoring the male associated with the gold model over the male paired with the wild type model.Female subjects spent similar amounts of time in association with the male previously paired with the gold model in both trials (trial 1: 219.25, 122-409 s; trial 2: 210.10, 108-295 s; t; t = 0.424, df = 38, p = 0.674).Likewise, females spent similar amounts of time with the male that had spent with male 'X' in phase 1 (in which no model female was used) vs phase 2 (wherein a model female was initially paired with the smaller male) in expt.I. Groups 'W' (green; n = 18) and 'G' (gold; n = 19) used wild type and gold model females, respectively in phase 2. Subjects in the control group 'C' (blue; n = 17) had no opportunity to view a model in phase 1 or 2 of expt.I. Note: Positive values indicate a decrease in time spent with male 'X' from phase 1 to phase 2, while negative numbers indicate an increase in time spent with male 'X' from phase 1 to phase 2. * Signifies a significant change in total time (s) spent with male 'X' between phases 1 and 2 indicative of mate choice copying behavior.

Experiment III: Female preference for gold vs. wild type males
Females demonstrated a significant preference for the gold over the wild type dummy male in phases 1 and 2 of expt.III (Table 1; Fig 6).Test subjects showed a similar preference and spent a similar amount of time in front of gold males on both days of testing despite the presence of a model female in association with the non-preferred wildtype male in phase 2 (Table 1; Fig 6).Likewise, females spent similar amounts of time in front of the wild type males in both phases, despite the presence of a model in phase 2 (Table 1; Fig 6).Therefore, unlike results for expt.I and II, there was no evidence of mate choice copying in expt.III.Lastly, females' motivation to choose between males (total time females spent in both preference zones within a test) did not differ between phases 1 (649.7 s, 435-794 s) and 2 (640.7 s, 467-733 s) of preference testing (n = 20, t = 0.367, df = 38, p = 0.716).

Discussion
The behavioral responses of test subjects to the dummy male stimuli in the present study were comparable to those observed in previous studies of female mate choice using similar methodology [e.g., 14,18] as well as those employing live males as stimuli [20,32,59].Females belonging to all three groups (W, G, and C) collectively and consistently spent more time in association with the larger dummy male in the absence of model females in phase 1 of expt.I.Such preferences for larger male body size using live as well as dummy male stimuli are well established in the literature for P. latipinna among other poecilid fishes [e.g, 10-14, 18, 51].Females from the control group (group C) maintained their initial preferences for the larger male when retested in phase 2 of expt.I.However, the females belonging to groups W and G both changed their preferences in favor of the smaller male after observing a model female in association with the initially non-preferred dummy.These results offer evidence of mate choice copying behavior similar to those observed in previous studies of this and other closelyrelated species [14,31,35].Moreover, the present study shows that wild type females not only copy the choices of other wild type females (group W), but those made by females expressing an artificially-selected, novel "gold" trait as well (group G).These data suggest that subject females recognized the gold variant model as a conspecific.However, confirmation of this assumption requires further testing; perhaps involving a control group using similarly-colored, closely-related heterospecific females as models.
The data from expt.I served as the inspiration for the study's second experiment wherein wild type females were presented with a pair of size-matched wild type dummy males both of which paired with model females (one gold and the other wild type).Subject females showed consistent and significant preferences for males paired with a gold model over those paired with a wild type model.These results hint at the existence of pre-existing sensory/perceptual biases for the gold phenotype that affected their mate choice copying behavior, drawing the subject female's attention not only to the gold model, but to the male she was associated with as well.This conclusion is strengthened by data indicating females switched their preferences from one male to the other after swapping the model females; consistently preferring the male observed in association with the gold rather than wild type model.Previous studies have offered theoretical and empirical evidence for the spread of novel traits in males via sensory exploitation [18,26,60].However, results from the present study indicate such biases may also influence courtship behavior and reproduction in circumstances where the novel trait is expressed in females rather than (or perhaps in addition to) males.
In a related study addressing the role of model female quality in the mate choice copying behavior of sailfin mollies, Hill and Ryan [61] provide additional evidence indicating that the mate choice behavior of female sailfin mollies (P.latipinna) is affected by the phenotypes of the models used in the experiment.Test females choosing between two males of similar body length were found to significantly increase time spent with previously non-preferred males after observing them with a relatively "high-quality" conspecific P. latipinna female.However, they spent significantly less time associating with previously preferred males after having observed them with a relatively "low-quality" parthenogenetic Amazon female (P.fermosa).The authors suggested that such mate choice copying behavior might be maintained by selection based on the "heuristic value it provides females choosing between males whose quality differences are not easily distinguishable [61]." The underlying genetic/heritable basis for novel/arbitrary traits like the gold phenotype and the potential for expression in both sexes have evolutionary implications, particularly if females are preferentially drawn to conspecifics that express the novel trait regardless of sex.This was the impetus behind the study's third experiment designed to assess female preference for gold vs. wild type males, the results of which revealing strong preferences for the former over the latter.Moreover, in the follow-up mate choice copying assay, females maintained their preferences for gold males despite having observed a wildtype model in association with the wild type "rival".These data offer further evidence for the existence of a perceptual and/or cognitive bias in the female nervous system that favors the artificially selected gold phenotype and/or novelty in general; a preference strong enough to outweigh the conflicting social driver of mate choice in the form a model female paired with the wild type male.
Research into the effects of genetic verses social influences on female mate choice is few and far between.However, in one such study, Dugatkin [39] tested a genetically based preference for orange coloration in male guppies against the socially-driven phenomenon of mate choice copying.He found that females copied the model's choice of the less attractive (less orange) male when the color difference between paired males was small, but not when the difference was more substantial.The study thus provided evidence that a socially-driven mate preference could override a genetically based preference, but only to a certain extent beyond which social learning could no longer override the hard-wired preference for orange coloration.Witte and Ryan [35] similarly found that female sailfin mollies copied the mate choices of model females when both males presented in a test were similar in body length.However, when the model female was presented next to the smaller male of a pair that differed substantially in length, females consistently preferred the larger one.The difference in body size of the sailfin males used in the present study were small yet significant enough for females to distinguish between them, favoring the larger of the two in phase 1 of expt.I.However, the size difference was evidently not so large as to override the power of persuasion afforded by the model female in phase 2. These kinds of data bring to light a growing need to identify the innate (genetic) as well as social factors shaping the evolution of female preferences along with the objects (sexual ornaments) of their sexual desire.The present study in particular highlights not only the significant role social environment can play in affecting mate choice decisions, but the equal, if not more impactful role an animal's aesthetic "tastes for the beautiful" can have on the evolution of male sex ornaments.
There are almost certainly no survival benefits associated with the gold phenotype for either sex, nor have more than a few speckles of gold coloration been observed in any naturally-occurring population of sailfin mollies.Rather, the gold phenotype is a product of decades of artificial selection on P. latipinna in the aquarium fish trade-a seemingly arbitrary trait bred into the species for its aesthetic value to people interested in keeping "pretty" fish in their homes.The perceived attractiveness of the gold phenotype to human observers is a product of our own sensory and cognitive processing of a "gold stimulus" on display in pet store aquaria.The results from the present study suggest we are not alone in our judgement of gold mollies as aesthetically "pleasing" to the senses.Perhaps a similar/parallel neurological phenomenon to our own ocurrs within the brains of female mollies, facilitating their preferences not only to associate with gold-colored males, but particular wild type males previously "chosen" by golden models.
Natural selection, though a fundamental and ubiquitous force of nature, is not synonymous with evolution itself.Evolution can be extravagant to an extent where sexual ornaments may not only fail to signal anything about objective mate quality, but perhaps even lower the survival and fecundity of both signaler and receiver.Animals may therefore end up making poor mating decisions while in pursuit of subjective preferences that ultimately result in a worse fit between them and their environment [1].Positioned as they are at the lower end of the food chain, sailfin mollies are prey for numerous animals including aquatic insects, other fishes, reptiles and amphibians, birds and mammals [20,50,62].In addition to possible genetic and/ or or developmental constraints, such predation pressure might explain the paucity of conspicuous color patterns in the wild as we find in the aquarium fish trade.The emergence of such "hidden preferences" within a population may indeed be constrained by the potential for other selective agents to act against them.A conspicuous novel trait such as the gold phenotype may not only attract predators to those expressing it, but those whom associate with the individuals expressing the trait as well, thereby placing themselves at higher predation risk than others who favor less conspicuous individuals.That being said, increased predation risk could still be offset by the indirect benefits accrued through female mate choice, assuming her male offspring inherit the father's attractive phenotype [14,26].
For centuries, the "aesthetics of nature" has consisted entirely of investigating human aesthetic experiences of the natural world.However, aesthetic evolution informs us that nature's beauty, from the melodious vocalizations of songbirds to the colorful petals of many flowers, have coevolved their aesthetic forms with the evaluation of female passerines and animal pollinators, respectively.We may admire their beauty, yet often fail to appreciate the extraordinary aesthetic agency of "wild animals" in shaping such adornments [1].Data from the present study tell a similar story in reverse, where humans, through decades of selective breeding, have served as the agents of evolutionary change, crafting a phenotype pleasing to the senses of humans and mollies alike.
Might the present study illuminate a potential mechanism by which a hidden preference in females could facilitate the evolution and spread of an arbitrary, novel trait via mate choice copying?The results summarized herein suggest females with the novel gold phenotype played a disproportionate role in influencing the mate choice decisions of other females.The subset of males preferred by model females expressing the novel trait would therefore accrue a disproportionate number of mating opportunities relative those shunned by such influential females.Whether these kinds of social interactions would/could facilitate the spread of the novel trait adorned by the models themselves is a matter of debate.Regardless, it is evident these novel females, in having such influence on the mate choice decisions of others, would be in the driver's seat with regards to which male traits/ornaments offer the greatest (and least) reproductive success to the bearers.That is, whichever heritable male traits the mutant model females were most drawn to would be strongly favored via sexual selection across generations.
In conclusion, preferences to associate with conspecifics expressing rare and/or novel phenotypes are not uncommon in the Poeciliid family of fishes [e.g., 14,26,63] and they are known to copy the mate choice of others [e.g., 14,37,64].Consequently, one could make the argument that the novel gold phenotype, once introduced via mutation, migration or some other mechanism of evolutionary change, could potentially spread through the population via sexual selection [65].Moreover, the work presented in this study provides evidence of a possible mechanism by which a seemingly arbitrary, novel, artificially-selected trait, by exploiting a sensory bias, might spread via mate choice copying not only when expressed exclusively by males [14], but females as well.The present study thus combines the separate concepts of randomly arising novel ornaments and mate copying to explain the evolution of sexually selected traits.The preference for gold observed in these experiments interacted with a mechanism for passing on information (i.e., mate copying) in a way that could facilitate the spread of such novelty in both sexes were it to arise in a natural population of P. latipinna and/or other poeciliid species [14].Further research might include investigations of P. latipinna among other poecilids that express different selectively-bred color patterns and the extent to which they might also be favored by wild type females in the context of mate choice and/or social interactions in general.

Fig 1 .
Fig 1.Schematic of observation and testing phases of experiments I and III.Top view of the observation and testing phases of experiments I and III.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0298171.g001

Fig 2 .
Fig 2. Schematic of observation and testing phases of experiment II.Top view of the observation and testing phases of experiment II.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0298171.g002

Fig 3 .
Fig 3. Results from phase 1 of experiment I. Results from phase 1 of expt.I comparing the of mean time (± SE) female test subjects spent in association with the larger-vs smaller-male per 20-min preference assay in each of three replicates of the same experiment (groups 'W', 'G', and 'C').Note: * Indicate significant preference for the larger of the two paired males.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0298171.g003

Fig 4 .
Fig 4.Mean change in time spent with male 'X' in phase 1 vs phase 2 of expt.I. Mean change in total time (± SE) spent with male 'X' in phase 1 (in which no model female was used) vs phase 2 (wherein a model female was initially paired with the smaller male) in expt.I. Groups 'W' (green; n = 18) and 'G' (gold; n = 19) used wild type and gold model females, respectively in phase 2. Subjects in the control group 'C' (blue; n = 17) had no opportunity to view a model in phase 1 or 2 of expt.I. Note: Positive values indicate a decrease in time spent with male 'X' from phase 1 to phase 2, while negative numbers indicate an increase in time spent with male 'X' from phase 1 to phase 2. * Signifies a significant change in total time (s) spent with male 'X' between phases 1 and 2 indicative of mate choice copying behavior.

Fig 5 .
Fig 5. Results from experiment II.Results from expt.II comparing the of mean time (± SE) female test subjects spent in association with a male previously paired with a wild type female model vs a size-match male previously paired with a gold female model, per 20-min preference assay.* Indicates significant preference for the 'gold-modeled' over the 'wild type-modeled' male.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0298171.g005

Fig 6 .
Fig 6. Results comparing time spent with wild type vs gold males in phases 1 and 2 of expt.III.Results comparing the of mean time (± SE) female test subjects spent in association with a wild type vs a gold male in phases 1 (no model female) and 2 (model present) of expt.III.Phase 2 involved pairing the non-preferred wild type male from phase 1 with a wild type model female prior to conducting the preference assay.* Indicates significant preference for the gold over the wild type male in both phases.'X' indicates no significant change in time spent with the wild type, or gold males between phases 1 and 2 and therefor no evidence of mate choice copying behavior.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0298171.g006